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Sunday, August 18, 2013

Marcus Mosiah Garvey

de bene esse: literally, of well-being, morally acceptable but subject to future validation or exception

“Chance has never yet satisfied the hope of a suffering people”
"Men who are in earnest are not afraid of consequences."

from EDUCATE YOURSELF

"Use every spare minute you have in reading. If you are going on a journey that would take you an hour carry something with you to read for that hour until you have reached the place. If you are sitting down waiting for somebody, have something in your pocket to read until the person comes.

Don't waste time. Any time you think you have to waste put it in reading something. Carry with you a small pocket dictionary and study words whilst waiting or travelling, or a small pocket volume on some particular subject. Read through at least one book every week separate and distinct from your newspapers and journals. It will mean that at the end of one year you will have read fifty-two different subjects.

After five years you will have read over two hundred and fifty books. You may be considered then a well read man or a well read woman and there will be a great difference between you and the person who has not read one book. You will be considered intelligent and the other person be considered ignorant. You and that person therefore will be living in two different worlds; one the world of ignorance and the other the world of intelligence.

Never forget that intelligence rules the world and ignorance carries the burden."

- Marcus Mosiah Garvey, born 17 August 1887.

Jamaica's First National Hero.

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